Besides the "windflower", I love how the Canaanites called anemones, "the lover's wounds".
As she spoke, she sprinkled his blood with sweet nectar, which made it swell up, like a transparent bubble that rises from muck; and in no more than an hour a flower sprang out of that soil, blood red in its color, just like the flesh that lies underneath the tough rind of the seed-hiding pomegranate.
Brief is its season, for the winds from which it takes its name, the anemone, shake off those petals so lightly clinging and fated to perish.
click here to see more flowers
¡Hola Sophie!, vuelves con fuerza, con una
ReplyDeletemagnifica fotografía, delicada, y con un
estupendo procesado.
Un saludo, Ángel
¡Hola Sophie!, vuelves con fuerza, con una
magnifica fotografía, delicada, y con un
estupendo procesado.
Un saludo, Ángel
· Bienvenida!!!
I just adore the anemones! There are so many lovely!
ReplyDeleteGorgeous! Anemones are wonderful.
ReplyDeletewonderful genus of plants. I love them all.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful!
ReplyDeleteI love the folklore that is connected to flowers. Wonderful red color. Tom The Backroads Traveller
ReplyDeleteOnce I blogged an anemone too, it was lilac. Maybe its wound was softer or... different, somehow...
ReplyDeleteBeautiful photo and a wonderful name given to it by the Canaanites.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for contributing to Floral Friday Fotos.
Aphrodite had many lovers, Adonis was her most loved according to the legend.
ReplyDelete